Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This. Uncomfortable, impersonal, robotic.
Agree. That living room looks like a hospital operating room. No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most mid century modern looks like it’s meant to encourage guests to leave the house as soon as soon as humanely possible. We get it, you hate people.
Flat bottom bathroom sinks. Why is this a thing. They look disgusting after one use.
Griege walls. Life is just not that grim. Find joy.
Such a bizarre take lol
MCM furniture is usually uncomfortable. The hard surfaces, sharp edges, and straight lines are visually stressful; they don’t feel organic, and people are unconsciously tense in those environments. The style isn’t designed for warmth or a sense of caring.
Anonymous wrote:This. Uncomfortable, impersonal, robotic.
Anonymous wrote:Vessel sinks. I hate those things with a passion!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rustic French country, unless it's authentically done with real pieces. So many people do this weird generic American version where all the furniture is way too large and it's very fake and cheesy to me.
80s modern with the black leather and the glass. Impractical, ugly, tacky. Hate hate hate.
The faux farmhouse aesthetic popularized by Joanna Gaines with the stupid wooden signs and the big clocks and fake shiplap etc. etc. So ubiquitous. So unstylish.
I don't have the same hate for midcentury modern as some on this thread but I think it's overdone and also a lot of individual MCM pieces are objectively ugly and don't get more attractive just because they once lived in an office in the 60s. However I really love true Danish modern and other Scandinavian offshoots, for their clean lines and use of color.
I also have a real fondness for maximalism done well, and my sense is that DCUM absolutely hates that kind of thing. I'm talking about patterned wallpaper with contrasting furniture and pillows and baroque frames in mismatched finishes and heavy curtains hung from the top of the wall to the floor, layered rugs, etc. Wild color combos incorporating bright pinks and yellows and oranges. It can easily go wrong but when well executed, I absolutely love it. I love color so much, I wish people weren't so afraid of it in home design.
Do you like this?
I’m not the PP, though I agree with the PP.
I don’t love that picture, but I also don’t like the cold gray living room of a few pages ago either.
If the black cabinets in the room were removed, and some of the art, I’d like it a lot better. I don’t like the heavy black though.
I think half of the pattern could be removed and it would be much better. If you removed the yellow and just continued with aqua or green, it would be an improvement.
Anonymous wrote:I think the problem with MCM is that it got trendy and spawned so many cheap knock offs that’s what everyone thinks of. The original stuff is nice. I have a MCM dining table and coffee table but they don’t look like what has been sold as MCM. It is clean lines but not the extreme sharp edges and the soindly pointed legs. The dining room table has a dark stain. The coffee table is natural cherry but not orange tone—more the color of someone with medium brown hair. It’s very warm and a really good size (not too big but functional with a lower shelf, which was surprisingly hard to find when we considered replacing it).
It was the same problem with the oak antique reproductions in the 1980s. It was cheap oak so it looked cheap. Real quartersawn oak from the 1920s or earlier is gorgeous.
Whenever something is trendy, it kills it because you get too saturated with the cheap versions.